Monday, May 11, 2026

Point park spring river scenes

Next to Lachine there is a marina, protected from the river by a long point with a park on it. I paint there often, usually in spring and summer because its hard to get there in the winter. This one is looking upstream from the end of the park, with some new leaves on an overhanging tree. 

Upstream view Spring, watercolour 6 x 7.5" cold press, May 2026

Looking downstream towards the Mercier bridge, you see one of the many park benches in the foreground. It was a cool and sunny afternoon, quite pleasant. I used dilute indo blue (PB60) for the water, and a mix of indo blue with burnt yellow ochre (PR102) for the park bench, with carbon black (PBk6) for the iron parts. 

Bench Mercier bridge, watercolour 6 x 7.5" cold press, May 2026

Lucky they had this sign, because two people tried to walk this way as I painted. Its a long narrow spit of land that comes off the point park, but the current on both sides is strong and dangerous. Plenty of red-winged blackbirds were cawing and flying around, they love to congregate along the shore. The fresh air here was, well, refreshing... it smelled of river water and fresh earth, without the exhaust fumes from the city. The view here goes on for miles, in the distance, its the south shore. 

No walking upstream view, watercolour 6 x 7.5" cold press, May 2026


Sunday, May 10, 2026

Cultural monstrosity, genetically modified fart

We went for a walk today to see the tulip beds up at the Cavendish underpass, but the city had left black tarpaulins on the gardens, and only a few tulips could struggle through. It was quite a disappointment, so I joked that the tulips were cancelled. A cultural cancellation. As I cut open old paint tubes that are mostly empty, its an opportunity to do these funny paintings. The main paint here is lemon yellow (PY175), a slightly whiteish yellow, pleasant for summery scenes. 

Culutre Cancelled, watercolour 9 x 12" watercolour paper, May 2026

What does the interior of a monstrosity look like? This painting sums it up. For the design, I emulated a digital drawing I made on my smartphone awhile ago you can see it linked here. On digital, you can go over things no problem, or erase entirely, but in watercolour, its hard to layer things unless you go light to dark, like you see in the painting. Placing the black highlights on last took a bit of courage, it can easily go wrong!

Monstrosinterior, watercolour 9 x 12" watercolour paper, May 2026

Starting with orange dots, surrounded by yellow, then circled with brown and filled in with maroon, you end up with... genetically modified farts. Enough said. 

Genetically Modified Fart, watercolour 7.5 x 11" watercolour paper, May 2026  (No. 1473b)

 

How the Cat Saw It

How do cats really see things and think about things? Who knows, but its probably different than we think. In the painting, a cat prowls after a green laser-dot from a pointer, while a one-eyed mouse creature scurries in the foreground. This painting is a remake of an old painting I made in 2009 of the same name which I never posted on the blog. When I saw the name of the painting in my catalogue, I was like, what is that!? Digging it out of the box, and it was a very odd painting, kind of Halloween style set in an orange and pink cavern. For this version I redesigned the scene a little and changed the cat around to be on the prowl. I almost didn't even sign this painting, because who else would paint something like this, other than maybe, the cat...  

How the Cat Saw It, watercolour 8 x 10" hot press, May 2026

Saturday, May 9, 2026

Endless Pylons

I hope the Mayor of Montreal sees this painting, after proclaiming that orange pylons would be banished from Montreal! Its a scene looking along the Concorde Bridge towards downtown. The nice thing is they finished paving the bike path after many years of working on it, so the path was silky smooth. Traffic was actually moving along the bridge, the pylons seem to be there instead of road lines. Not sure... 

To paint Endless Pylons, I started with the road, bike path, and side of bridge, along with the river underneath. Next I filled in the sky and tree-line, with building details in the background. When dry, I applied the pylons over top of the road using a mix of benzi orange (PO62) and pyrol orange (PO73), which I call "Montreal Orange" because it replicates the exact shade of pylons. Its looking like there will be a lot of orange this summer!  

Endless Pylons, watercolour 6 x 7.5" cold press, May 2026

Tulips and Montreal Orange construction

Spring is a time for colourful flowers like these orange and pink tulips, with a few yellow dandelions in the grass. Its also a time for construction signs and pylons.... "Montreal Orange". Its a mix of benzi orange paint (PO62) and red-orange paint (PO73). To do this painting, I worked up the colour highlights first, then filled in the sky, bridge, and middle-ground. Today, I used a separate brush to do the sky with phthalo blue (PB15) and blue-green (PG7), so as to keep the other brushes clean. Since I started cleaning the brushes after every trip, I noticed how much phthalo blue remains in the brushes, and it makes the bright colours difficult to achieve, especially yellow and orange. So today, the colours were really popping in my paintings. 

Tulips Cartier bridge, watercolour 6 x 7.5" cold press, May 2026


It was pretty disappointing today... the boardwalk that oversees Old Port was completely blocked off for construction, every other street downtown was construction, and the bridges connecting to Notre Dame Island were completely blocked off. I was hoping to get to Notre Dame Island to paint the flowers and flowering-trees. You can see my post from May 3 2025 on the location. So instead I made another tribute painting to Montreal... Construction blocking the Concorde bridge with sage advice on the signs. 

Montreal FU construction, watercolour 6 x 7.5" cold press, May 2026

Spring flowers and greens

Down in Parc Gédéon-De Catalogne (st Henri) near the Lachine canal, there is a long and narrow park with landscaping, including a long ess-shaped garden with hundreds of flowers. At this time, white and yellow daffodils were coming up, along with a few red tulips in the background, and some magenta ground cover flowers in the bottom right. The lawn was done with bright yellow (PY184) and green (PG36), when dry, over-painted with green and yellow hatch marks for texture. 

 Daffodils st Henri, watercolour 8 x 10" cold press, May 2026

 

This scene is Viger square, which is built over top of the rte 136 underground highway. There was a noisy seagull cawing at me. Two trees with very different shades of green are in the background. The left tree is mostly done with bismuth yellow (PY184) dabbed with yellow-orange (PY110) or dilute green (PG36). On the right, the tree is dilute perylene green (PBk31) overpainted with a mix of perylene green and regular green. The lawn is bismuth yellow with regular green. It was nice to practice painting green again!

Shades of green noisy gull, watercolour 6 x 7.5" cold press, May 2026

In the same Viger park, I turned and painted this scene of a bench painted with 'Land Back'. It was a great place to stand and paint... good sight lines, and a warm sun falling on the scene. I had almost forgotten what shadows looked like with all the overcast weather we have been having. 

Land back bench, watercolour 6 x 7.5" cold press, May 2026

It was also good to see the water flowing down st Lawrence river, its been frozen for ages it seems. This view is looking upstream from Old Port, you see the Concorde bridge which connects Montreal to st Helens Island. After, I would ride across that bridge towards the island. 

Concorde bridge spring, watercolour 6 x 7.5" cold press, May 2026

Friday, May 8, 2026

No garbage

Taking a bit of a ride after the office, I headed down the Maisonneuve bike path and made a quick painting near the Girouard underpass. This sign is posted at the alley behind a car mechanic, I just liked the contrast, and the interesting textures on the brick wall behind, which was covered in graffiti. Tomorrow is supposed to be sunny for once, I hope to get some good Spring scenes done. 

No garbage, watercolour 6 x 7.5" cold press, May 2026